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Deployment & Configuration
Installation
Truviso can be installed on any standard Linux server in less than a day. Server capacity is dependent on data volume, data speed and number of queries, but no special hardware or software is required for even very large datasets.
Configuration
Truviso is extremely flexible and made to easily fit into just about any IT landscape. Getting Truviso “up and running” can take as little as a few hours to a few days, depending on business needs, data sources, and the complexity of analysis.
Queries
Standards are the name of the game. Just like a traditional database, Truviso uses the SQL query language to construct queries. There’s no special language or constructs needed—write queries and graphs and reports can be generated automatically with the TruBuilder engine based on the resulting datasets.
Visualization
You can customize the content as well as the look and feel of the TruView browser-based reporting interface using Adobe Flex and standard CSS style sheets. It’s simple to drop your, or your customers’, logos in, change colors, fonts and dimensions, add filters, and user-controlled reporting variables to make sure users get the data they need in the format they need it. TruView enables you to setup filters, roles, permissions, and users so different groups or individuals have access to different content, graphs and reports.
Administration
System and user management is performed through a web-based administration console, where you can change system settings and create and edit user accounts. Logging and archiving of any data stream is also an option, and DBAs will find they’re right at home with administration and controls.
High Availability
Truviso was designed with high-availability and production environments in mind. It’s not a BI tool designed for behind-the-scenes back-office work, but providing real time analysis inline with other production systems. Multiple Truviso instances can be deployed across distributed systems, enabling edge and “in-network” data processing. Clustered servers provide redundancy as well as augmented processing power if needed.
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